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In 1932, a remarkable event occurred in Washington, DC that laid
the groundwork for later social legislation, including the all
important GI Bill for WWII veterans.
In 1932, a remarkable event occurred in Washington, DC. In the
darkest days of the Depression, thousands of unemployed World War I
veterans marched to the capital city, looking to Congress for an
advance on the bonus compensation promised to them years earlier.
After camping and lobbying throughout Washington for two months,
the veterans were driven out by force, as rising military figures
General Douglas MacArthur, Major Dwight Eisenhower and Major George
Patton cleared out the "Bonus Army" and burned their camps. By the
time the clash was over, two marchers were dead, thousands were
tear-gassed and countless homeless veterans, many with families,
were driven violently from the capital. The Bonus Army incident had
become a political liability for President Herbert Hoover. Still,
it laid the groundwork for later social legislation, including the
all important GI Bill for WWII veterans.